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psreport(1) [debian man page]

PSREPORT(1)							   User Commands						       PSREPORT(1)

NAME
psreport: - report on the packets in a Program Stream SYNOPSIS
psreport [switches] <infile> DESCRIPTION
TS tools version 1.11, psreport built Nov 11 2008 17:15:47 Report on the packets in a Program Stream. Files: <infile> is an H.222 Program Stream file (but see -stdin) Switches: -stdin Input from standard input, instead of a file -verbose, -v Output packet data as well. -max <n>, -m <n> Maximum number of PS packets to read -dvd The PS data is from a DVD. This is the default. This switch has no effect on MPEG-1 PS data. -notdvd, -nodvd The PS data is not from a DVD. The DVD specification stores AC-3 (Dolby), DTS and other audio in a specialised manner in pri- vate_stream_1. TS tools version 1.11, psreport built Nov 11 2008 17:15:47 Report on the packets in a Program Stream. Files: <infile> is an H.222 Program Stream file (but see -stdin) Switches: -stdin Input from standard input, instead of a file -verbose, -v Output packet data as well. -max <n>, -m <n> Maximum number of PS packets to read -dvd The PS data is from a DVD. This is the default. This switch has no effect on MPEG-1 PS data. -notdvd, -nodvd The PS data is not from a DVD. The DVD specification stores AC-3 (Dolby), DTS and other audio in a specialised manner in pri- vate_stream_1. SEE ALSO
The full documentation for psreport is maintained as a Texinfo manual. Please check http://tstools.berlios.de for more information. psreport 1.11 November 2008 PSREPORT(1)

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STREAM_TYPE(1)							   User Commands						    STREAM_TYPE(1)

NAME
stream_type - attempt to determine if an input stream is TS, PS, or ES SYNOPSIS
stream_type [switches] <infile> DESCRIPTION
TS tools version 1.11, stream_type built Nov 11 2008 17:15:48 Attempt to determine if an input stream is Transport Stream, Program Stream, or Elementary Stream, and if the latter, if it is H.262 or H.264 (i.e., MPEG-2 or MPEG-4/AVC respectively). The mechanisms used are fairly crude, assuming that: - data is byte aligned - for TS, the first byte in the file will be the start of a NAL unit, and PAT/PMT packets will be findable - for PS, the first packet starts immediately at the start of the file, and is a pack header - if the first 1000 packets could be H.262 *or* H.264, then the data is assumed to be H.264 (the program doesn't try to determine sensible sequences of H.262/H.264 packets, so this is a reasonable way of guessing) It is quite possible that data which is not relevant will be misidentified The program exit value is: * 10 if it detects Transport Stream, * 11 if it detects Program Stream, * 12 if it detects Elementary Stream containing H.262 (MPEG-2), * 14 if it detects Elementary Stream containing H.264 (MPEG-4/AVC), * 5 if it looks like it might be PES, * 9 if it really cannot decide, or * 0 if some error occurred Files: <infile> is the file to analyse Switches: -verbose, -v Output more detailed information about how it is making its decision -quiet, -q Only output error messages TS tools version 1.11, stream_type built Nov 11 2008 17:15:48 Attempt to determine if an input stream is Transport Stream, Program Stream, or Elementary Stream, and if the latter, if it is H.262 or H.264 (i.e., MPEG-2 or MPEG-4/AVC respectively). The mechanisms used are fairly crude, assuming that: - data is byte aligned - for TS, the first byte in the file will be the start of a NAL unit, and PAT/PMT packets will be findable - for PS, the first packet starts immediately at the start of the file, and is a pack header - if the first 1000 packets could be H.262 *or* H.264, then the data is assumed to be H.264 (the program doesn't try to determine sensible sequences of H.262/H.264 packets, so this is a reasonable way of guessing) It is quite possible that data which is not relevant will be misidentified The program exit value is: * 10 if it detects Transport Stream, * 11 if it detects Program Stream, * 12 if it detects Elementary Stream containing H.262 (MPEG-2), * 14 if it detects Elementary Stream containing H.264 (MPEG-4/AVC), * 5 if it looks like it might be PES, * 9 if it really cannot decide, or * 0 if some error occurred Files: <infile> is the file to analyse Switches: -verbose, -v Output more detailed information about how it is making its decision -quiet, -q Only output error messages SEE ALSO
The full documentation for stream_type is maintained as a Texinfo manual. Please check http://tstools.berlios.de for more information. stream_type 1.11 November 2008 STREAM_TYPE(1)
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